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2017 Ivy League Men's Basketball Tournament

2017 Ivy League Men's Basketball Tournament
Classification Division I
Season 2016–17
Teams 4
Site Palestra
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Champions Princeton (1st title)
Winning coach Mitch Henderson (1st title)
2018 →
2016–17 Ivy League men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
Princeton 14 0   1.000     23 7   .767
Harvard 10 4   .714     18 10   .643
Yale 9 5   .643     18 11   .621
Penn 6 8   .429     13 15   .464
Columbia 5 9   .357     11 16   .407
Brown 4 10   .286     13 17   .433
Cornell 4 10   .286     8 21   .276
Dartmouth 4 10   .286     7 20   .259
2017 Ivy League Tournament winner

The 2017 Ivy League Men's Basketball Tournament was a postseason conference tournament for the Ivy League. The tournament was March 11 and 12, 2017 at the Palestra on the campus of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.

The tournament marked the first postseason tournament held by the Ivy League in men's basketball. Princeton, the regular season champions and undefeated in conference play, beat Yale in the championship to win the tournament championship. As a result, Princeton received the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament.

The Ivy League was the last NCAA Division I conference to hold a postseason tournament, instead choosing to award its automatic bids to the NCAA men's and women's tournaments to its regular-season champions; in the event that two teams finished tied atop the standings, Ivy League bylaws allowed for a one-game playoff to determine the championship, and in exceptionally rare cases, a three-team single-elimination tournament would be scheduled if three teams tied atop the standings (the Ivy League never had more than three regular season co-champions in one season). The Ivy League has historically resisted postseason play in all of its sports.

In March 2016, the League announced that it would institute men's and women's conference tournaments beginning with the 2016–17 season. Both tournaments would initially be held at the same site. The conference also reduced by one the number of regular-season games that its members are allowed to schedule.

The top four teams in the Ivy League regular-season standings qualified for the tournament and were seeded according to their records in conference play, resulting in a Shaughnessy playoff.


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